Huckabee trying to sneak up on Republican leaders

Thu Nov 8, 2007 8:31am EST
 
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By Steve Holland

WATERLOO, Iowa (Reuters) - Republican candidate Mike Huckabee is trying to sneak up on the leaders in his party's presidential race and is doing it with a folksy style that mixes jokes with a firm commitment to conservative values.

Huckabee, a former governor of Arkansas who made a name for himself by dropping 110 pounds (50 kg) in weight and writing a book about it, is running a lean campaign, trying to use what money he has to the best advantage.

And he is taking a page out of the old political handbook that it is important to shake as many hands as possible and look people in the eye.

So it was that Huckabee found himself at Doughy Joey's pizza joint in Waterloo this week, telling a crowded room about being from Hope, Arkansas, the same hometown as the original "man from Hope," former Democratic President Bill Clinton.

There was the time his son made a cake for the family but did not know what a dash of salt was so he mixed a cup into the batter just to make sure there was enough.

"You won't eat it, but if you have cows at home, they might lick it for a week or two," Huckabee says.

That kind of talk plays well in the farm country of Iowa and he is seen as a wild card here.

He is attempting to pull off a surprise victory or have a high finish in Iowa's January 3 caucuses, when voters gather in groups and make their choices in the Republican and Democrat races, kicking off the process that will lead to the November 4, 2008, presidential election.

Huckabee is drawing support from those Republicans who are not all that happy with former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who is leading in national polls, and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who is leading polls in Iowa.

"I'm a Huckabee person. The front-runners are just not cutting it for me," said Bernie McKinley, 78, of Waterloo. "They waffle on issues I care about."

ABSOLUTE STANCE

McKinley and others applauded Huckabee's absolute stance against abortion and against gay marriage. Giuliani, by contrast, favors abortion rights and gay rights.

"He has one message, not a message for each area that he goes to," said Gloria Gallaher, 72. "He has principles and character and intellect. I think Giuliani is too liberal. He doesn't take a direct stand on anything."

On the stump, Huckabee speaks unequivocally against illegal immigration, saying, "If people can't get jobs with legal documentation, then they won't stay because there's no reason for them to."

He talks tough on the war against Islamic extremism -- but with a twist.  Continued...

 
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